Kinmen Folk Culture Village
金門民俗文化村
Alternative namesShanhou Folk Culture Village
General information
Typecultural center
Architectural styleFujian
LocationJinsha, Kinmen, Taiwan
Coordinates24°30′12.3″N 118°26′27.8″E / 24.503417°N 118.441056°E / 24.503417; 118.441056
Construction started1876
Completed1900
Design and construction
DeveloperWang Kuo-chen

The Kinmen Folk Culture Village (traditional Chinese: 金門民俗文化村; simplified Chinese: 金门民俗文化村; pinyin: Jīnmén Mínsú Wénhuà Cūn) is a cultural center in Jinsha Township, Kinmen County, Taiwan.

History

The culture village was designed by an architect from Jiangxi and built by Wang Kuo-chen, a successful businessman who created his wealth while he was in Japan. The construction started in 1876 and it took 25 years to complete all buildings in this area in the year 1900.[1] During the martial law period, the village was renovated to become a folk culture village and later in 1995 was included into the Kinmen National Park.[2] It was the first village in Kinmen which was turned into a tourist destination.

Architecture

The culture village has the most complete range of types of Fujian buildings and consists of 18 house buildings, which are 16 symmetrical two-courtyard historic houses, an ancestral shrine and a school academy named Hai Jhu Tang. All of the buildings were built on the hillside of Mount Wuhu facing the sea in three orderly rows on a solid granite rock bed. It consists of three settlements, which are Shangbao, Zhongbao and Xiabao. Shanghao and Zhongbao settlements belong to the Wang clan while the Xiaobao settlement belongs to the Liang clan.[3]

See also

References

  1. "Shanhou Folk Culture Village". Classic Kinmen Travel. 26 July 2019. Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  2. "Folk Culture Village". roundTAIWANround. Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  3. Liao, George (14 March 2019). "Taiwan's Kinmen National Park -- Shanhou Folk Culture Village". Taiwan News. Retrieved 15 March 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.